Mr Collins said: 'We want to know more about what this event in Southsea was. The victim remembers it being a charity event for disabled sports people.

Mystery event: The alleged victim believed Jimmy Savile, pictured on Top Of The Pops in 1976, was in Southsea, Hants, in 1972 for a charity event in aid of disabled sports stars

Scene of the alleged crime: The alleged victim claims Savile abused him on Southsea common, in Hampshire, pictured above

SAVILE'S ESTATE FROZEN

The estate of Jimmy Savile has been frozen in response to the mounting sexual abuse claims against the late television and radio star.

NatWest Bank, which is acting as the Jim'll Fix It presenter's will executor and trustee, said the distribution of his assets had been put on hold because of the allegations.

Savile's estate is reportedly worth £4.3 million.

NatWest said in a statement: 'Given the claims raised, distribution of the estate has been put on hold.'

Savile's will was written in 2006 and bequeaths his savings and other assets to 26 separate beneficiaries, according to the Financial Times.

The newspaper said it had obtained a copy of the document which instructs that £20,000 in cash was to be shared between 20 of the celebrity's friends, family and neighbours.

It says a further £600,000 was to be put into a trust fund, with the interest shared between eight people.

The remainder - just under £3.7 million before expenses - was to be held by NatWest on behalf of The Jimmy Savile Charitable Trust.

'We want to know specifically if Savile was the guest of honour and who was involved in arranging his visit.

'An organiser wouldn’t get into trouble because they may not be the person or organisation who employed Mr Savile.'

He is being assessed by a psychiatrist before Pannone decides how much compensation to seek from Savile’s estate.

Mr Collins said: 'It appears Mr Savile was able to have direct access with young people and do terrible things to them.

'This is a typical child abuse case and the victim has for many years been able to suppress what happened to him.

'Now with all the attention surrounding Mr Savile the memories have come back.'

Pannone is following up other lines
of inquiry from victims across the country, after reports that more than
200 people say Savile abused them.

It comes as Savile's niece today told how she 'cried for a week' after hearing accusations that her uncle had abused hundreds of girls.

Pam
Ward, from Edinburgh, said that their family will 'never get over' the
allegations of sex abuse carried out by the former Top of the Pops
presenter.

Huge investigation: Police are now investigating hundreds of reports of abuse by Jimmy Savile, pictured in the Yorkshire town of Ilkley in September 2010

Mrs Ward, 66, said she was in a state
of 'disbelief' when she first heard what the 'kind and charismatic'
uncle she knew was accused of doing.

The married mum of four said she is
ashamed of her uncle's alleged actions, and she has no idea what she
would say to the victims.

'Shocked': Pam Ward, from Edinburgh, said she had been left in turmoil over the recent revelations about her shamed uncle Jimmy Savile

Speaking to an Edinburgh evening paper she said: 'It was disbelief at first. It’s like I’ve lived a sheltered life and never known any of these things were going on.

'The first week, well I practically spent the first week crying. I’ve been sent lots of flowers, had phone calls and cards, with people offering support.

'It’s nothing to do with me, but in a sense I feel ashamed. I’m sure it’s the same with the rest of the family, although I wouldn’t like to speak for them.

'Everyone has been talking about all the awful stuff. The good work he committed himself to all his life has been quickly forgotten.

'What can I say, what would you say to the victims if it was your relative?'

Mrs Ward was 43 when she discovered that Savile was her long-lost uncle.

Adopted at 18 months, she waited until her adoptive parents had died before starting to search for her birth parents. It was then she discovered her father was Jimmy’s older brother, John Henry Savile.

Mrs Ward had cut ties with her father in the years before his death in 1998, but said she was completely unaware of the allegations until they were reported in a Sunday newspaper on October 14.

The walls of her home remain decorated with several of her uncle Jimmy’s pictures, which Mrs Ward has felt unable to take down.

She added: 'Hopefully in years to come they will look back at some of the good work he did, but I understand it’s pretty unlikely.'